i showed up to read your webpage, not a thousand lines of CSS
this is a subtoot of
people { who: write; their: css; like: this!important; it: takes; up: so; much: space; and: distracts; from: the(content); which: "i came"; to: see;}
@Lady i mean when you’re learning it definitely makes it a lot easier to debug
@Satsuma does it? i find it much less readable
@Lady it did for me
@Satsuma hm i feel like an important caveat here is that the order of properties should be sensible, like
Margin: 0; Border: None; Padding: 0; Font-Family: Serif; Font-Style: Italic; Font-Weight: Bold
is fine but
Font-Family: Serif; Padding: 0; Font-Style: Italic; Border: None; Margin: 0; Font-Weight: Bold
is atrocious
i think the one‐property‐per‐line syntax encourages the latter, whereas putting it all on one line encourages people to order their properties like a sentence
A small, community‐oriented Mastodon‐compatible Fediverse (GlitchSoc) instance managed as a joint venture between the cat and KIBI families.
@Satsuma hm i feel like an important caveat here is that the order of properties should be sensible, like
Margin: 0; Border: None; Padding: 0; Font-Family: Serif; Font-Style: Italic; Font-Weight: Bold
is fine but
Font-Family: Serif; Padding: 0; Font-Style: Italic; Border: None; Margin: 0; Font-Weight: Bold
is atrocious
i think the one‐property‐per‐line syntax encourages the latter, whereas putting it all on one line encourages people to order their properties like a sentence